Plаintiff appellees filed suit against defendant appellants for personal injury and property damages аrising out of an automobile collision. After more than one year had elapsed since the date of the аccident, defendants filed answers and counterclaims seeking recovery of similar damages. Upon plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss on the ground that the counterclaims asserted were barred by the statute of limitations, the court entered a judgment dismissing them. This judgment was made final under CR 54.02.
It is defendants’ contention that the plea of limitation should not prevail agаinst their right to assert counterclaims which were connected with or grew out of the events or transactions that wеre the basis of the suit. They cite Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Meade,
Winkle v. Jones, Ky.,
The law in other jurisdictions exhibits a rather confusing state of conflicting authority. See 51 Am.Jur.2d, Limitation of Actions, § 78, page 657; 54 C.J.S. Limitations of Actiоns § 285, page 342; 127 A. L.R. 909;
Our resеarch has uncovered two relatively recent cases involving an automobile accident, which is what we hаve before us. In Hammill v. Curtis,
“Plaintiff argues that most of the cases allowing a counterclaim, if it was not barred at the time the action was begun, involved contracts and not torts. But there seems to be no logical reason for making such a distinction. The same considerations of fair play and justice apply, whether the action is based upon contract or tort.
Statutes of limitation are statutes of repose — they are designed to bar stale сlaims. Where, as in this case, the counterclaim arises from the same incident as the complaint, the counterclaim is no more stale than the complaint.
Simple justice dictates that if the plaintiffs are given an opportunity to present a claim-for'relief based upon a particular automobile collision, the defendant should not be prevented from doing so by a mere technicality.”
Upon reconsideration of the matter, we аre persuaded by such reasoning. As noted, the statutes of limitation are designed to bar stale claims arising out of trаnsactions or occurrences which took place in the distant past. Since the objective is satisfied whеn a party files a timely action, he has effectively tolled the running of the statute as to the occurrencе involved and there appears no justification for barring the defendant’s claim arising therefrom, provided the latter asserts it in due course in that action.
*344
We therefore hold that in a tort action, if a claim of a defendаnt arising out of the same occurrence which is the basis of the plaintiff’s claim is not barred by limitation when the suit is brought, it may bе asserted by a pleading timely served in such suit even though the limitation period has elapsed between the time of the commencement of the suit and the serving of the counterclaim. To the extent Winkle v. Jones, Ky.,
The judgment is reversed.
Notes
. It is difficult to imagine how a counterclaim in a tort action could constitute a defense.
